Frontier mental health research: psychedelics & drug studies

Each month our editorial team sifts through hundreds of papers and curates notable findings—for practitioners and informed readers who want to stay current with the evidence. Subscribe to the monthly Research Digest for expert analysis and concise summaries of key papers.

3 papers

Psilocybin for Addiction

Based on 19 papers

Research on using psilocybin to treat addiction is growing and looks promising, but it is still early. Small clinical trials, patient reports, and laboratory studies suggest psilocybin and other classic psychedelics can change brain circuits, produce powerful psychological experiences, and sometimes reduce substance use. However, most studies so far are small, often early-stage, and don’t yet prove that psilocybin reliably treats addiction for everyone. Scientists think psilocybin could help by opening a window of brain plasticity (making the brain more able to change), shifting a person’s sense of self and cravings, and connecting the drug sessions to careful therapy. At the same time, there are real safety questions, limits in who has been studied, and clear gaps that need bigger, controlled trials before psilocybin can be called a proven treatment for addiction.

Key findings

  • Researchers have restarted clinical studies testing psilocybin and other psychedelics for problems that include addiction. 15098 15058 15059
  • Early trials and reports show promising signs: some people treated with psychedelics report large, rapid improvements in mental-health symptoms and reductions in substance use, but most of these studies are small. 15063 15059 15085
  • Psilocybin and similar classic psychedelics mainly act on serotonin brain receptors and are linked in lab and animal studies to increased neuroplasticity — the brain’s ability to form new connections — which might help change addictive habits. 15050 15091 15059
  • Some research suggests psychedelics can reopen a short-lived window for social and reward learning in the brain. This change in brain learning systems could be relevant for changing addictive behaviors. 15074
  • People often describe strong subjective experiences during psychedelic sessions — such as mystical feelings, new insights, or a loosened sense of self — and these experiences frequently link to better outcomes in studies. 15092 15091
  • The way psilocybin is given matters a lot: careful screening, preparation, a safe setting, and follow-up therapy are commonly used in studies and are thought to shape results and safety. 15065 15063
  • Safety risks are real. Psychedelics can cause strong hallucinations and, in rare cases or with some drugs, long-lasting perceptual problems; trials report psilocybin was generally well tolerated but sample sizes were small and monitoring is needed. 15080 15063 15085
  • Research limitations are important: most studies are early-stage or small, some psychedelic treatments differ a lot between trials, and people of color have been underrepresented, which limits how well results apply to everyone. 15091 15085 15095
  • Some findings disagree or vary: for example, animal studies show that effects on brain connections can depend on dose and biological sex, so results are not always the same across experiments. 15050
  • Overall, evidence for psilocybin as an addiction treatment is promising but preliminary. Larger, controlled trials that track safety, include diverse people, and test how much benefit comes from the drug versus the surrounding therapy are still needed. 15098 15087 15063 15085

Psychedelic Commercialization: A Wide-Spanning Overview of the Emerging Psychedelic Industry

Jacob S. Aday, Brian S. Barnett, Dan Grossman, Kevin S. Murnane, Charles D. Nichols, Peter S. Hendricks
Psychedelic Medicine Summary & key facts 2023 49 citations

This article is a broad review of the new psychedelic industry. The authors look at how psychedelic drugs and clinics moved from decades-old research into a fast-growing business with hundreds of companies and big investment. They describe what companies are trying to sell, point out major scientific, legal, and ethical…

Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Diverse academic research themes Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ayahuasca Ibogaine

The Emerging Field of Psychedelic Psychotherapy

Gregory Barber, Scott T. Aaronson
Current Psychiatry Reports Summary & key facts 2022 48 citations

This review looks at recent research where drugs like MDMA and psilocybin are given inside carefully run therapy programs. People get hours of preparation, one or more drug sessions, and several follow-up therapy sessions to help make sense of the experience. Trials so far show big improvements for some people…

Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Diverse academic research themes Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ayahuasca Ibogaine

Is the Requirement for First-Person Experience of Psychedelic Drugs a Justified Component of a Psychedelic Therapist’s Training?

Nathan Emmerich, Bryce Humphries

This paper looks at whether trainee psychedelic therapists should be required to take psychedelic drugs so they can understand patients' experiences. The authors review the idea that first-person psychedelic trips give special knowledge, and they argue this benefit is not clearly unique or proven. They conclude that forcing trainees to…

Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Diverse academic research themes Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ayahuasca Ketamine
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